List of compositions by James Horner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of compositions by James Horner.
1970s
| Year | Title | Director | Studio(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1978 | The Drought | (for the American Film Institute) | ||
| Fantasies | ||||
| Gist and Evans | ||||
| Landscapes | ||||
| Just for a Laugh | ||||
| The Watcher | ||||
| 1979 | The Lady in Red | Lewis Teague | New World Pictures | |
| Up from the Depths | Charles B. Griffith | Additional cues only. Main score composed by Russell O’Malley. |
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
| Year | Title | Director(s) | Studio(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | The Karate Kid | Harald Zwart | Overbrook Entertainment JW Productions China Film Group Columbia Pictures |
Replaced Atli Örvarsson |
| 2011 | Day of the Falcon[2] | Jean-Jacques Annaud | Image Entertainment | |
| 2012 | Cristiada | Dean Wright | ARC Entertainment 20th Century Fox |
|
| The Amazing Spider-Man | Marc Webb | Marvel Entertainment Columbia Pictures |
||
| 2015 | Wolf Totem | Jean-Jacques Annaud | ||
| One Day in Auschwitz[3] | Steve Purcell | Documentary | ||
| Living in the Age of Airplanes[4][5][6] | Brian J. Terwilliger | Terwilliger Productions | ||
| Southpaw | Antoine Fuqua | Escape Artists Fuqua Films The Weinstein Company |
Posthumous release | |
| The 33 | Patricia Riggen | Alcon Entertainment Phoenix Pictures Warner Bros. Pictures |
Posthumous release | |
| 2016 | The Magnificent Seven | Antoine Fuqua | Village Roadshow Pictures Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Columbia Pictures |
Posthumous release Composed with Simon Franglen Main theme by Elmer Bernstein |
Television
- 1981 A Few Days in Weasel Creek[7]
- 1981 Angel Dusted[7]
- 1982 A Piano for Mrs. Cimino[7]
- 1982 Rascals and Robbers: The Secret Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn[7]
- 1983 Between Friends[7]
- 1985 Amazing Stories[7] ("Alamo Jobe")
- 1985 Surviving[7]
- 1990 Tales from the Crypt[7] ("Cutting Cards")
- 1990 Extreme Close-Up[7]
- 1992 Fish Police[7] (theme and pilot episode)
- 1992 Crossroads (theme)
- 1999 Michelle Kwan Skates to Disney's Greatest Hits[7]
- 2000 Freedom Song[7]
- 2006 CBS Evening News[8]